Spring 2025 SOWK 587 Week 03 - Schools as Organizations - Understanding the Landscape

Spring 2025 SOWK 587 Week 03 - Schools as Organizations - Understanding the Landscape
title: Spring 2025 SOWK 587 Week 03 - Schools as Organizations - Understanding the Landscape date: 2025-02-07 11:55:40 location: Heritage University tags:
- Heritage University
- MSW Program
- SOWK 587 presentation_video: > “” description: >
Week three for SOWK 587 is focused on exploring school climate and culture and understanding schools as organizations. Students will read about the professional standards and services social workers provide in schools and our essential practices. In the forums, they will consider practices for supporting student needs. This week is a synchronous week with in-person class on 02/08/25. The agenda for the in-person class session is as follows:
- Understanding school climate and school culture
- Exploring what the climate is in your schools
- Multi-Tiered Systems of Support
- Exploring interventions within MTSS
- Diversity and inclusion within services
The Learning Objectives include:
- Explain the difference between RTI, PBIS, MTSS
- Be able to assess school climate
- Identify potential interventions and what tier they are
- Develop insight into diversity and inclusion

SOWK 587 Week 03 Agenda and Learning Objectives
Agenda
- Understanding school climate and school culture
- Exploring what the climate is in your schools
- Multi-Tiered Systems of Support
- Exploring interventions within MTSS
- Diversity and inclusion within services
Learning Objectives
- Explain the difference between RTI, PBIS, MTSS
- Be able to assess school climate
- Identify potential interventions and what tier they are
- Develop insight into diversity and inclusion

School Climate vs School Culture: Perceptions vs. Values/Beliefs
School climate and culture are essential concepts to review when considering the landscape of schools. Gruenert and Whitaker (2023) argue that school climate and culture are distinct concepts. They define that:
“A school’s climate is both a window into its culture and a learned response that the culture teaches new members”
Culture tends to be the long-term reasons why we do things, and it is changed over a long period of time based on addressing climate.
Climate | Culture |
---|---|
Short-Term | Long-Term |
What you do | Why you do it |
Indicates type culture | Changed through climate |
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B
Reference
Gruenert, S., & Whitaker, T. (2023). School culture versus school climate. Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD). https://ascd.org/blogs/school-culture-versus-school-climate

Definition of School Climate
The National School Climate Council (n.d., 2017) combines the topics of climate and culture and focuses on climate as specific topics. We are going to use their definition of school climate.
School climate
- refers to the quality and character of school life
- is based on patterns demonstrated across constituents’ (students, parents, and personnel) experiences and how they are enacted in school life (norms, goals, values, interpersonal relationships, teaching and learning practices, and organizational structures).
They define that climate is made up of:
- Norms, values and expectations that support people feeling socially, emotionally and physically safe.
- People are engaged and respected.
- Students, families and educators work together to develop, live and contribute to a shared school vision.
- Educators model and nurture attitudes that emphasize the benefits and satisfaction gained from learning.
- Each person contributes to the operations of the school and the care of the physical environment.
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B
Reference
National School Climate Council. (n.d.). What is school climate and why is it important? https://schoolclimate.org/school-climate/
National School Climate Council. (2007). The school climate challenge: Narrowing the gap between school climate research and school climate policy, practice guidelines, and teacher education policy. National School Climate Center (NSCC), Center for Social and Emotional Education (CSEE), National Center for Learning and Citizenship (NCLC) at Education Commission of the States (ECS). https://schoolclimate.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/school-climate-challenge-web.pdf

What Is Your School’s Climate Like
I want you to talk about your school’s climate related to the criteria used in a survey that some schools use to assess school climate. We will speak generally about the domains evaluated by The Comprehensive School Climate Inventory (CSCI). It is not the inventory, but I think it can provide some meaningful discussion.
[Small Group Activity] Discuss Aspects of School Climate
- Move to be in groups within the same district, but you will have to include 2 or 3 districts
- Go to the PDF The 14 Dimensions of School Climate Measured by the CSCI
- Talk about each dimension and what you think perceptions might be.
[Whole Group Activity] Debrief discussion
- What stands out about some of the school culture you discussed?
- Was there one aspect that felt particularly successful or needing extra support?
- What are strategies for creating change in our districts?
The content of the 14 Dimensions includes the following:
Safety
- Rules and Norms
- Sense of Physical Security
- Sense of Social-Emotional Security
- Online Safety
Teaching and Learning
- Support for Academic Learning
- Social and Emotional Learning
Interpersonal Relationships
- Respect for Diversity
- Teacher-Student Relationships
- Peer Relationships
Institutional Environment
- School Connectedness
- Physical Surroundings
- Social Inclusion
Leadership and Efficacy
- Administration and Leadership
- Collective Efficacy
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B

RTI – MTSS – PBIS
Working in schools you will quickly come across many presentations with triangles. RTI and PBIS are commonly discussed as is MTSS. They all provide a format for how we bring support to students in a school setting.
RTI - Response to Intervention
Focused on academic focused and format for determining special education services.
PBIS - Positive Behavior Intervention and Supports
Focused on social, emotional, and behavioral needs. Often a set of strategies
MTSS - Multi-Tiered Systems of Support
Can be both academic and behavioral.
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B
Reference
Raetz, P. B., & Winter, B. L. (2018). Response to intervention. In C. R. Reynolds, K. J. Vannest, & E. Fletcher-Janzen (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Special Education, Volume 4: A Reference for the Education of Children, Adolescents, and Adults Disabilities and Other Exceptional Individuals (p. 1045). John Wiley & Sons.
Zhang, J., Martella, R. C., Kang, S., & Yenioglu, B. Y. (2023). Response to intervention (RTI)/multi-tiered systems of support (MTSS): A nationwide analysis. Journal of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies, 7(1).

Levels of Intervention
Within the different systems and across different frameworks sometimes the overall percentages are different, the tiers and percentages are generally as follows:
Tier 1 (Core Programming or Universal) - 80-90% Use of high-leverage practices and evidence-based practices; aligned with state or district standards; use of differentiated instruction.
Tier 2 (Supplemental Intervention or Indicated) - 5-10% Standardized interventions that are supplemented and for small-groups (through not always delivered in a small-group setting).
Their 3 (Indicated, Intensive Intervention, or Individualized) - 1-5% Individualized and intensive interventions for students with ongoing needs
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B
Reference
American Institutes for Research. (n.d.) What is Multi-Tiered System of Supports (MTSS)? https://mtss4success.org/resource/what-is-mtss
Sailor, W., Dunlap, G., Sugai, G., & Horner, R. (2008). Handbook of Positive Behavior Support. Springer Science & Business Media. https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=TW8go24dqDkC

PBIS/MTSS Teams
I know many of you are on teams at your schools.
[Whole Group Activity] Discuss Student Experiences of Engaging in MTSS Teams
- Are you on a team?
- How is it being on the team?
- What do they do?

Exploring Tiered Interventions
On MyHeritage, I have shared a number of resources around behavioral interventions within tiered systems. I want to have us explore what some of the potential intervention might be.
[Small Group Activity] Exploring Intervention on the EIS
- Divide the class up into three groups and assign a tier
- Groups to explore some of the problems, as a group with their interventions.
- Discuss as a group the interventions reviewed
- What does it look like (share personal examples)
- What do you think some of the strengths and weaknesses might be
- Would it help at your school
- Share findings with the class
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B

Distribution and Receiving Services
In a MTSS system, we can think about two axes…
- Resources and Student Needs
- Each tier requires increased resources to match the increased student needs
WE also consider how gets the services. It is useful to remember who gets access to what services.
- The majority get tier 1 and only tier 1
- Those who have a higher need get tier 1 and 2
- Those who need tier three get all three tiers.
What about Tier 4? Discussion about my previous district program.

Access and Belonging
I got the opportunity to hear Krownapple speak a few years back. I really appreciated a graphic he shared representing belonging and access.
Excluded (conditional belonging and low access) Integrated (Conditional belonging and high access) Segregated (Unconditional belonging and low access) Integrated (unconditional belonging and high access)
I just really love the idea of integrated meaning that sometimes the boundaries get dispersed to include those on the edges.
Reference
Cobb, F., & Krownapple, J. (2019). Belonging through a culture of dignity: The keys to successful equity implementation. Mimi and Todd Press.

Diversity and Inclusion: How do We Include Everybody
[Small Group Activity] Talk with a partner about Including
- What is the importance of inclusion
- What are some of the challenges
- How might some people be on the edges of inclusion
- What do we need to do to promote inclusion
[Small Group Activity] Report Back on Discussion
[Content Note] ✅ Competency B